One way to magnify your opposition to the nuclear waste dump proposed for the Canadian shores of Lake Huron is to join with hundreds of other opponents on the St. Clair River in Port Huron, Michigan

Don’t worry about fitting into one political group or another, or one particular environmental group or another. “This is a grass roots event,” said Jeremy Whitmore, a Port Huron resident who organized the rally with fellow activist Valerie Daggett.

Whitmore and Daggett happened to attend a presentation by Kevin Kamps, a nuclear waste expert with the Maryland-based organization Beyond Nuclear, on June 17 at the St. Clair County building in Port Huron.

“We went and saw Kevin Kamps and were really inspired by what we heard,” said Whitmore. “One of his ideas to oppose the nuclear dump was a rally.”

“There were about 30 people there and we thought more should have come,” said Daggett. “We put the idea of a rally out on social media and it blew up.”
For novices, Whitmore and Daggett have put together an attractive line-up of speakers and music for the event. I also thought it was pure genius to schedule the protest rally on the same day as the annual Float Down on the St. Clair River where it’s estimated that five to six thousand people will be in attendance.

Other presenters included Lynn Rosales from Aamjiwnaang First Nation; Jutta Splettstoesser, a farmer from Kincardine, Ontario, who is running for provincial office under the Green Party banner; Ellen Dailey and Jill Taylor, members of Save Our Saugeen Shores, or SOS, a group based near the proposed dump, and Michael Keegan from Coalition for a Nuclear Free Great Lakes, who has spearheaded opposition to DTE’s nuclear reactor on the shores of Lake Erie in Monroe and the company’s proposed new reactor.

The Green Party is the only party that opposes the dump, Splettstoeoesser told Blackburn News recently. Read the full story at Voice News